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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Feldarol Foundry Plc v Hermes Leasing (London) Ltd & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 747 (11 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/747.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 747 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BOURNEMOUTH COUNTY COURT
(MR RECORDER BARRIE)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
LORD JUSTICE KAY
____________________
FELDAROL FOUNDRY PLC | Claimant/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
HERMES LEASING (LONDON) LTD | First Defendant/Appellant | |
AMARI SANT AGATA CLASSICS | Second Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR PHILLIP JONES (instructed by Stevensdrake of Crawley) appeared on behalf of the Claimant/Respondent
The Second Defendant was not represented and did not attend
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
" ..... Mr Beresford's strong and genuine enthusiasm for the Lamborghini quickly turned to dust when he found that it handled badly, and his disappointment with this car quickly led him to think that he did not want a Lamborghini Diablo at all."
"The car was returned to you following my rejection of it."
He added that the arrangement they had made for a substitute was without prejudice to his rights and remedies following rejection. Mr Beresford copied this letter to the appellant on 12 August. In his accompanying letter he explained the arrangement he had made with the dealer and that everyone was working hard to ensure a satisfactory outcome. He was therefore "maintaining payments under this agreement". Mr Beresford did not tell TCA that the car had been defective until 19 August. This information was passed on to Hermes that day, and on 23 August the respondent's solicitors wrote to the appellant saying that the car had been rejected because it was defective. No further instalments were paid under the agreement which the appellant purported to terminate before re-possessing the car from the dealer.
"(1) It is expressly agreed and acknowledged that no representation, condition or warranty has been given by or on behalf of the owner in respect of any of the goods or about the quality, description merchantability, fitness or correspondence with description of the goods or otherwise of the goods. All such representations, conditions and warranties whether express or implied by law are excluded apart from those incapable of exclusion by virtue of any statutory enactment."
"(2) Where the creditor ..... hires goods under a hire-purchase agreement in the course of a business, there is an implied term that the goods supplied under the agreement are of satisfactory quality."
"(2) As against a person dealing as consumer, liability for breach of the obligations arising from -
(a) .....(b) section ..... 10 ..... of the 1973 Act .....cannot be excluded or restricted by reference to any contract term."It goes on to say:
"(3) As against a person dealing otherwise than as consumer, the liabilities specified in sub-section (2) above can be excluded or restricted by reference to a contract term, but only in so far as the term satisfies the requirement of reasonableness."
(1) A party to a contract 'deals as consumer' in relation to another party if -
(a) he neither makes the contract in the course of a business nor holds himself out as doing so; and(b) the other party does make a contract in the course of a business; and(c) in the case of a contract governed by the law of ..... hire purchase ..... the goods passing under or in pursuance of the contract are of a type ordinarily supplied for private use or consumption."
In this case it is common ground that conditions (b) and (c) are met: the appellant made the contract in the course of its business and the goods were of a type ordinarily supplied for private use.
"On first considering this question, it seemed to me that [the respondent] must have been acting in the course of its business. It is a company, which was purchasing a motor car for the purpose of providing the motor car to its managing director as a part of the rewards of his employment. It also seemed to me that [the respondent] had held itself out as acting in the course of its business by the terms of the agreement which provide a statement of the nature of the business and the number of years it has been established, which was signed by Mr Beresford in his capacity as director, and which includes a declaration under which Mr Beresford signed 'I confirm that I/we have selected the goods and that they will be used for the purposes of my/our business."
However, he went on to hold that he was bound to conclude that the respondent had dealt as consumer by the decision of this court in R & B Customs Brokers Co Ltd v United Dominion Trust Ltd [1988] 1 WLR 321. The facts in that case could not be realistically distinguished from those of the present case.
"In the present case there was no holding out beyond the mere facts that the contract and the finance application were made in the company's corporate name, and in the finance application the section headed 'Business Details' was filled in to the extent of giving the nature of the company's business as that of shipping brokers, giving the number of years trading and the number of employees, and giving the names and addresses of the directors. What is important is whether the contract was made in the course of a business.
In a certain sense, however, from the very nature of a corporate entity, where a company which carries on business makes a contract, it makes that contract in the course of its business; otherwise the contract would be ultra vires and illegal. Thus, where a company which runs a grocer's shop buys a new delivery van, it buys it in the course of its business. Where a merchant bank buys a car as a 'company car' as a perquisite for a senior executive, it buys it in the course of its business. Where a farming company buys a landrover for the personal and company use of a farm manager, it again does so in the course of its business. Possible variations are numerous. In each case it would not be legal for the purchasing company to buy the vehicle in question otherwise than in the course of its business."
Dillon LJ went on to refer to the decision of the House of Lords in Davies v Sumner [1984] 1 WLR 1031, a case which was decided under the provisions of the Trade Descriptions Act 1968, where the House of Lords held that a self-employed courier who sold his car and falsely represented its mileage had not supplied a false trade description "in the course of a trade or business", so it had not been guilty of an offence under the Act. Lord Keith had delivered the only speech in that case. He relied on the fact that the car had not been sold as an integral part of the defendant's business and that a degree of regularity was required before it could be shown that something had been done in the course of a trade or business. Dillon LJ continued at page 330 G:
"I find pointers to a similar need for regularity under the Act of 1977, where matters merely incidental to the carrying on of a business are concerned, both in the words which I would emphasise 'in the course of' in the phrase 'in the course of a business' and in the concept, or legislative purpose, which must underlie the dichotomy under the Act of 1977 between those who deal as consumers and those who deal otherwise than as consumers.
This reasoning leads to the conclusion that, in the Act of 1977 also, the words 'in the course of business' are not used in what Lord Keith called 'the broadest sense'. I also find helpful the phrase used by Lord Parker CJ and quoted by Lord Keith, 'an integral part of the business carried on'. The reconciliation between that phrase and the need for some degree of regularity is, as I see it, as follows: there are some transactions which are clearly integral parts of the businesses concerned, and these should be held to have been carried out in the course of those businesses; this would cover, apart from much else, the instance of a one-off adventure in the nature of trade, where the transaction itself would constitute a trade or business. There are other transactions, however, such as the purchase of the car in the present case, which are at highest only incidental to the carrying on of the relevant business; here a degree of regularity is required before it can be said that they are an integral part of the business carried on, and so entered into in the course of that business.
Applying the test thus indicated to the facts of the present case, I have no doubt that the requisite degree of regularity is not made out on the facts."
Neill LJ agreed. In his judgment, at page 336D, he said:
"It is of course true that section 1 of the Trade Descriptions Act 1968 creates a criminal offence whereas the other sections to which I have referred create no more than obligations in the civil law. Nevertheless, it would be unsatisfactory in my view if, when dealing with broadly similar legislation, the courts were not to adopt consistent construction of the same or similar phrases."
(1) that the judge should have distinguished R & B on the facts;(2) R & B was the decision of a two-man court which conflicts with the more recent decision of this court in Stevenson v Rogers [1999] QB 1029, and so should not be followed;
(3) that R & B was wrongly decided; and
(4) this court should hold that a company can never deal as consumer for the purposes of this legislation.
"The question thus becomes, in my view, whether the decision in R & B ..... albeit relating to a separate section of the Act of 1979, is effectively binding upon us on the basis that the term 'in the course of a business' must be interpreted so as to bear the same meaning as between the different sections of the codifying Act in which it appears. While I recognise the force of that argument, I do not think it should prevail.
The Act of 1979 forms a single code: however that is upon the basis simply that it consolidates and enacts within one statute and without material amendment a number of disparate statutes previously governing the field of sale of goods. While, in the first instance, a consolidating Act is to be construed in the same way as any other, if real doubt as to its legal meaning arises, its words are to be construed as if they remained in the earlier Act. Thus, in terms of the proper construction of its provisions, the Act of 1979 is not to be regarded as more than the sum of its parts.
That being so, I would observe as follows in respect of the R & B ..... case. First, the ratio of the decision is limited to its context, namely the application of section 12 of the Act of 1977. Second, save for passing reference in the obiter dicta of Neill LJ to which I have referred, the meaning of the phrase 'in the course of business' in that section was not treated as coupled with, or dependent upon, the meaning of the phrase in section 14 (2). Thus the court gave no consideration to whether or not the legislative history of section 14 (2) might require it to be distinguished from section 12 of the Act of 1977 or, alternatively, if a common interpretation was called for, whether the construction of Section 12 should not be subordinated to that of section 14 (2). Third, the obiter dicta of Neill LJ which might suggest that the observations of Lord Keith should be applied generally in the case of a seller of goods lacked the benefit of contrary argument in relation to section 14 (2) and, not least (at a date well preceding Pepper v Hart ..... ) any reference to Hansard or the First Report of the Law Commission, of which this court has had the advantage.
It is of course desirable that, when identical phrases occur in associated sections of a statute, they should be construed to similar effect. I have little doubt that such was the original intention of the Law Commission and of Parliament in relation both to the modification of section 14 (2) made by section 3 of the Act of 1973 and the amendment to section 55 of the Act of 1893 made by section 4 of the Act of 1973, which referred to a 'seller in course of a business' when defining a 'consumer sale.' However, the latter provision did not survive for long. It was repealed and replaced by section 12 of the Act of 1977, which put in place a different formula in respect of exemption clauses, based upon either party 'dealing as consumer,' rather than upon a 'consumer sale' defined principally by reference to the seller. In my view, had the court in R & B ..... been concerned not with the Act of 1977, but with the definition of a consumer sale under the Act of 1973, it might well have concluded that the phrase 'in the course of a business' in section 55 of the Act of 1893, as amended, required to be construed in harmony with, and subject to, the proper construction of section 14 (2).
As to the proper construction of section 14 (2), given the clear view which I have formed, I do not consider it right to displace that construction simply to achieve harmony with a decision upon the meaning of section 12 of the Act of 1977. Section 14 (2) as amended by the Act of 1973 was itself a piece of consumer protection intended to afford wider protection to a buyer than that provided in the Act of 1893. Indeed, there is a sense in which the decision in the R & B case can be said to be in harmony with that intention. It dealt with the position of consumer buyers and the effect of adopting the construction propounded in Davies v Sumner ..... in relation to section 12 (1) (a) of the Act of 1977 was to further such buyers' protection. In the context of its statutory history, section 14 (2), as amended by the Act of 1973 and re-enacted in the Act of 1979, is the primary provision in the overall scheme of increased protection for buyers which the Act of 1973 initiated. To apply the reasoning in the R & B case ..... in the interests only of consistency, thereby undermining the wide protection for buyers which section 14 (2) was intended to introduce, would in my view be an unacceptable example of the tail wagging the dog. Accordingly, I would hold that there was an implied term ..... in the contract [in that case]."
Butler Sloss LJ and Sir Patrick Russell agreed with Potter LJ.
Order: Appeal dismissed with the costs assessed as claimed without VAT